Tag Archives: Ancillary Estate

In this series of blog posts on ancillary probate, we laid out three foundational requirements for an ancillary estate in Oklahoma. These can be restated in 3 helpful summary questions to ask when trying to determine whether an ancillary probate … more

As stated in my prior post: “In an ancillary administration, the Oklahoma court will follow the distribution pattern laid out by the home state and apply it to the Oklahoma property.” This post asks the question: why? Why does Oklahoma … more

An order distributing the estate is one of the required documents from the home state / domiciliary administration to file an ancillary administration proceeding in Oklahoma. In this series, we have laid out three foundational requirements for an ancillary probate … more

When a decedent owns property in their home state and also Oklahoma (first foundational requirement) and there has been an estate or probate proceeding in the home state (second foundational requirement), the question become whether documents required under Oklahoma’s ancillary … more

Earlier in this series, we laid out a first foundational requirement and a second foundational requirement for an ancillary probate in Oklahoma. The first dealt with whether a decedent owned property both in their home state and Oklahoma. The second … more

If a decedent dies in any of the other 49 United States owning property in their home state but also owing property in Oklahoma (see prior blog posts here and here about common examples of multistate ownership that I see), … more

The first four blog posts in this series on ancillary probate dealt with various aspects of this first foundational issue: did the deceased die owning property in two more states? If so, an ancillary probate may be necessary. If not, … more

In my last post I gave three concrete examples of property ownership in multiple states that I commonly see. I gave quite a bit of detail in those examples. Those three examples could be further generalized or simplified as: 1. … more

As promised in my last post, below are a few concrete examples of owning property in multiple states that I commonly see: 1. Person A grew up on a farm in the Oklahoma Panhandle. Their parents owned real property near … more

In the first post in this series, I laid out the initial question to ask about ancillary estates: did the decedent own property individually in more than one state? This is much more common than some might think, especially along … more